|
Serge Prengel, Still A Dad: The Divorced Father's Journey. New York: Mission Creative Energy, 1999. 215 pages. ISBN: 1892482002
In this world of both increasingly dire straits for fathers and rapidly
burgeoning numbers of promale and profather books, Serge Prengel has
done what might have seemed impossible: written a truly indispensable
and utterly unique book on the subject of fatherhood and the divorce
process. He has masterfully bridged the political and personal, even
spiritual sides of the thorn-laden and mine-strewn trails of tears
which he and countless other divorced men have been forced to tread.
Prengel has a talent which regrettably is vanishingly rare
these days, of being able to empathize with multiple points of view,
despite their sometimes being in direct conflict. His own path as a
divorced dad led him to open his heart and his brain wide enough in
both compassion and spiritual understanding to enable him to pass by
the elephant-sized troubles he confronted without their crushing him.
And he has generously chosen to share the bounty of his learning with
us so that we may benefit from his learning.
The author enjoys an almost breathtaking facility at deftly
sketching the key points of a player's psyche in just a few words.
"Even many, many months into the divorce proceedings, John has kept
hoping: It won't happen to me." "A child needs certainties, simple
answers, a sense that there is fairness and logic in the world, in
order to feel reasonably safe." "Just imagine for a moment you're the
judge. You have in front of you two bickering people... You have to
make a decision, choose one or the other."
=javascript src="http://a.tribalfusion.com/j.ad?site=FatheringMagazine&adSpace=Parenting&size=336x280&type=var&requestID='+((new Date()).getTime() % 2147483648) + Math.random()+'">');
//-->
The drama which the author lays out for us and plays out for us is
one which each month is repeated countless thousands of times around
the country and around the world. Prengel ices the problem in a few
simple, deadly words, asking, "how can [his alter ego John] find a way
to be an equal parent within a system that only allows a
one-up/one-down outcome to a custody dispute?" A few sentences later,
the author chillingly concludes, "The system has no room for what he
wants."
Why, Prengel asks, is a married man presumed an equal partner
in budgeting child-raising expenses, but a divorced man has to make
substantial pre-set payments to his ex-wife without any say in how the
money is used? Why is it, as the author aptly summarizes the divorced
father's predicament, that you are a troublemaker and controlling if
you try to retain some influence over your child's day-to-day life, and
you're a deadbeat if you want to find a way to equitably share
responsibilities and expenses with your ex-wife? How can divorce law be
geared to fairness when winner takes all, humiliates the loser, and
does it all in the name of the child's best interests? Prengel makes
pithy suggestions about the change that needs to happen--a presumption
of shared parenting, not just shared custody.
With the typical visitation schedule, Prengel wryly notes in another
brilliant crystallization, a man becomes (if he is lucky) a sort of
uncle to his son. Later, he aptly compares modern divorce with the
medieval trial by ordeal, in which only a miracle could save the
accused's life and prove him innocent.
But the story does not end here. Prengel continues to trace the
all-too-frequent descent into misery that follows divorce for men with
children. And then, he offers the conclusions to which he eventually
came after years of torture and misery. No completely satisfactory
resolution is possible, of course, but acceptance is necessary, and it
is very helpful to cultivate a Zen-like ability to continue on and
retain hope after all hope seems lost.
Not that this is easy. Or fair. Prengel is no New Age polyanna,
telling divorced fathers that if they go to enough workshops or retrain
their thinking adequately, all will be well. He is simply offering
prescriptions for survival and for salvaging shreds of happiness from a
dire situation.
{mogoogle}
Many of his statements have an ability to resonate on multiple levels,
on the individual level in response to the specific post-divorce
situation, politically as directions for change, and as general
prescriptions as to how we all may improve our lives whatever our
marital state may be. "There is a lot to be gained for men in leaving
the adversarial game." Constantly thinking of all the players at once,
Prengel astutely explains in separate sections why this change would be
good for men, for children, and for women. (He does miss several other
ways it would help women--by changing perceptions of women, by
encouraging women to marry, and because long-term, men's welfare and
women's welfare are inextricably interconnected.)
Prengel's writing and thinking is wonderful to behold. He makes
numerous deft points that seem obvious and yet integrate different
disciplines, connecting the large scale and the small scale in a way
that is all too rare: Even in war, there are limits that cannot be
crossed known as "war crimes," so why do we instead rely on the law of
the jungle for conflict resolution in divorce? Two pages later, he
brilliantly shows the perfect applicability to adversarial divorce of a
chart developed to describe the differences between a healthy
relationship (the column entitled "equality") and "one in which the
woman is abused" (the column entitled "power and control").
Despite his own story and obvious personal pain, Prengel's tone
throughout this book is admirably judicious and balanced. The second
half focuses on the transformations men must undergo if they are to
survive what often becomes the hellish loss of their partner, children,
finances, house, and self-respect--often all in close succession.
Prengel succinctly lays out the conflicting emotions, and reminds us
that "in addition to fighting with your ex and with the legal system,
you're also fighting a battle within yourself." Ultimately, the author
helps us realize, this is the most important fight of all. And it's the
only one we can count on winning, but only if we are open to giving up
everything we thought we would have forever. A key moment in John's
path comes when he lets it all go. "John's heart opens up when he sees
how much he's willing to give his child, without anything in return."
Prengel also addresses shame and the shadow, issues not usually
considered in books also bearing significant political content. He
deftly finds a way around a central paradox: he is giving advice in
this book, from the outside, suggesting that men can only find the
inner truth they need to fight these battles by going inside. "I don't
really know what YOU should be doing." And we get practical
suggestions: Relax the pressure you put on yourself to do the right
thing. When you are with your child, ask open-ended questions and
reveal your thought process to the child. Don't project your anger onto
your child, and always speak positively of your ex. Let go of what is
holding you back from a fulfilling life by acknowledging the hurt this
process has caused your child. Unusually for a men's movement book,
Prengel sagely guides us away from a focus on our own pain.
Anyone who can take this book for what it offers, even if aspects of it
don't fully speak to them, is bound to reap a rich harvest. While it
may occasionally veer toward sound-bite and appear to lack deep
analysis, this is actually probably one of the most deceptively complex
and valuable books ever written for men. Even the book's physical
characteristics are lovely, down to the intimate yet universal cover
picture of father and son holding hands. "The journey starts when we
begin to notice the sacred where it is."
J.
Steven Svoboda is a performance artist, poet, and a human rights lawyer
who is Executive Director of Attorneys for the Rights of the Child,
which he founded in 1997.
|